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User: dark12222000

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  1. Re:They are not claiming everything is their own. on Red Hat Developer Demands Competitor's Source Code · · Score: 1

    RTS simply said they had used some APIs. What that means isn't entirely clear - it could mean modules, or just a specification. There has been some question as to whether or not they are shipping a modified Linux without releasing source, but that's been a more recent development.

  2. Re:Guilty by confusion. on Red Hat Developer Demands Competitor's Source Code · · Score: 1

    You're wrong. The issue here is whether or not Rising Tide backported other's contributions from their GPL version which would be a violation of the GPL. Nvidia's codebase is 100% theirs and is 100% proprietary, and therefore, they can do whatever they want with it. Rising Tide open sourced a version of their code. They claim the version they are now selling is only their work... despite that it seems to contain improvements found in the GPL version from other contributors.

  3. Re:Citation Needed on The Empire In Decline? · · Score: 1, Interesting

    http://www.digitimes.com/news/a20121112PD219.html

    Well, that only took a quick google.

  4. Depends on what you want on Ask Slashdot: What Is the Best Way To Add Forums To a Website? · · Score: 1

    Most of it depends on what you're after.

    PhpBB has a ton of features, but is a bit slow and bulky. I feel it's easy to work with, but it's probably not the easiest out there.

    VanillaForums are extremely simply but lack some features (though many of these can be "bought").

    vBulletin has a lot of niceties, but can be a bit of a hog and doesn't come cheap.

    There is also SMF (Simple Machine Forums) which I've been told is a cross between phpBB and Vanilla Forums, but I haven't personally used it.

    If you're new to this sort of thing, go for Vanilla. It's free, extremely easy, and has a lot of nifty features out of the box.

  5. Re:Halleluja! on FTC Whacks "Rachel From Card Holder Services" · · Score: 1

    I had similar problems. I finally talked to someone and had a several hour screaming match filled with legal threats and personal insults, after which the calls stopped for me.

  6. Re:the govt does not have any room to talk on Feds Continue To Consider Linux Users Criminals For Watching DVDs · · Score: 0

    So, there's this thing, called research - you should try it sometime before posting your uninformed opinions.

  7. Re:Delusional twaddle on A Supercomputer On the Moon To Direct Deep Space Traffic · · Score: 1

    My sarcasm detector must be going bad, because I actually thought you were serious.

  8. Re:Make it illegal on Hiring Smokers Banned In South Florida City · · Score: 4, Interesting

    You're confusing advertising with rights.

    I have a right (a liberty in Hoefield's scheme of rights) to curse within my own home. I also have a right to live off of brownies if I so decide. I don't have that right because brownies or cursing is so "valuable" per se, but because it's my right, legally, to do what I wish within my home so long as it doesn't affect others. To carry my example, I can't curse so loudly as to disrupt my neighbors, even though I can otherwise curse - again, the issue isn't the cursing here, it's that I am disrupting my neighbors.

    We can argue that smoking seems to cause a lot of health issues for non-smokers who are nearby. The majority of the research we have at this point seems to indicate a causative pattern pretty strongly. Therefore, at least in some states, you can't smoke in a restaurant or by a door way. On the other hand, there is absolutely no reason (nor does the Federal Government have the ability to) limit smoking within the privacy of your own home. I would argue that most businesses don't either unless they can prove that your smoking/non-smoking is required for your job (say, if you work at a hospital).

    TLDR: "If [eating brownies] is so great and such a valuable right that others shouldn't be able to stop you doing it whenever and wherever you please, why do [brownie producing companies] spend hundred of millions of dollars every year just to keep convincing people they need to keep doing it?

  9. Re:This was stupid the first time... on Open Source Raspberry Pi WebIDE Alpha Released · · Score: 1

    If you're on slashdot, you have a "more expensive host". Hell, if you have a smart phone, you have "a more expensive host". It's a freaking 30$ computer. Get over it. Yes, you can develop on it directly if you want. For the rest of us, there's this beautiful web based IDE.

  10. Re:reflects well on Torvalds Uses Profanity To Lambaste Romney Remarks · · Score: 1

    I agree with you, but I also agree with Linus.. Argh, what to do!?

  11. Re:Technet + Dreamspark on How Microsoft Is Wooing College Kids To Write Apps For Windows 8 · · Score: 4, Informative

    What University do you go to? CS at my Uni is 80% Macs, 10% Linux machines (disproportionately Ubuntu, for better or for worse), 5% Windows machines, and the rest never bring laptops (and borrow a mac from the Uni to do work on).

    Again, all of our software is either on a central server that can be SSH'd to with X access (and thus any machine can be used to get to it), it's cross platform, or it's OS/X or Linux. I can only think of maybe one specific class that you *must* have a windows machine for (and it's like a C# class or something) and even then, I think they meet in a computer lab of Windows machines.

    Any mac can be setup for development trivially quickly and easily. I'm not at all a mac fanboy (quite the opposite) but Apple did figure out how to treat their developers well. It wouldn't surprise me if a great amount of Universities are pretty Windows leaning, but it's not the de facto standard by any shot. OS X has a good hold on the Universities (and most programmers) and I strongly suspect it will continue grow. (Personally, they can have my Arch laptop when they can pry it out of my cold dead hands).

  12. Re:Technet + Dreamspark on How Microsoft Is Wooing College Kids To Write Apps For Windows 8 · · Score: 1

    Welcome to programming? Lets you see develop windows applications without buying a 400$+ windows PC, or even Linux applications without a machine that runs Linux. If you buy a mac, all the programming tools are free, all the documentation is free, and you don't even need to show student ID.

  13. Re:It Has Kept Us Safe on House Approves Extending the Warrantless Wiretapping Act · · Score: 2

    Yup. This has absolutely kept us perfectly safe. All of our consulates are safe, we've never had any terrorist attacks, and there have never been any breaches of government security. This is clearly working so well.

    By the way, you're a selfish bastard if all you care about is "My freedom".

  14. Re:Can this be retroactively legalized on House Approves Extending the Warrantless Wiretapping Act · · Score: 1

    It's not supposed to be legitimate to give a pass ex post facto, but it happens. This is pretty clear in both the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution.

  15. Re:If the odds are against you on What The Apollo 11 Crew Did For Life Insurance · · Score: 1

    It's not free money. You do understand how insurance works, right? You pay into a system based on estimated risk and if bad things happen, they pay a large lump sum to your survivors to help with expenses. It's not unreasonable to force an insurance agency to cover all types of work so long as they get to set the premiums and deductibles.

  16. Re:Underwhelming Nexus on Amazon, Apple Expected to Strut Their Small-Tablet Stuff Soon · · Score: 1

    You clearly can't read spec sheets. Go read what the Nexus 7 specs actually are and then try again.

  17. Re:Easy.... on Legitimate eBook Lending Community Closed After Copyright Complaints · · Score: 1

    "User License Agreement", ie, Contract. In order for a contract to be valid, a few things have to be true, in this case, the contract has to be legible/readable, and the other party must affirmatively agree to it. (This isn't an argument so much as just fact, which I'm sure you'll agree to).

    I'm going to argue that most EULAs represent a "sticker contract", and would typically be considered non-binding because they fail to be readable by any average person and that no affirmative consent is given. Legally, EULAs may or may not be legally enforceable in different states. South Carolina considers EULAs not-enforceable while some states may consider otherwise. From my own reading of the law, I think any "Here's a long complicated 20 page essay on how you don't have rights, written in a foreign language, click 'I Accept' to install" type thing doesn't constitute an actual legal binding agreement - YMMV, it's usually up to the court in question.

  18. Re:Easy.... on Legitimate eBook Lending Community Closed After Copyright Complaints · · Score: 1

    Several authors did specifically file just "complaints", not DMCA takedowns. Whether or not there were DMCA takedowns in there, we don't know.

    You are correct about not needing a EULA, it just helps.

  19. Re:Easy.... on Legitimate eBook Lending Community Closed After Copyright Complaints · · Score: 1

    You realize that's not a EULA, right? EULA stands for End User License Agreement. Those last two words there - License Agreement - actually have meaning. This isn't the fourth grade, learn how to use a dictionary.

  20. Re:Cry me a river on Legitimate eBook Lending Community Closed After Copyright Complaints · · Score: 1

    Yeah! Let's burn down all the libraries! We'll murder the inter-school lending programs too! And all of their administrators!

  21. Re:Easy.... on Legitimate eBook Lending Community Closed After Copyright Complaints · · Score: 4, Insightful

    EULAs, like any contract, are limited to what is legal.
    It IS legal, as per the DMCA, to bill for false takedowns.
    Therefore, so long as the EULA otherwise survives Probate (and is a valid contract), then you can, in fact, bill people for wrongful takedowns.

    However, in this case, it seems like these are just very loud complaints, not actual DMCAs. Complaints carry no legal weight, but may, say, convince your hosting company to turn you off.

  22. Re:Great on Vietnamese Bank Issues Fingerprint-Enabled Debit Cards · · Score: 1

    Fingerprint readers are a lot more expensive then a card reader. It's also trivial to install a second magstripe in an existing card reader, but it's a lot harder to mess with a fingerprint reader. Fingerprints aren't perfect (and fingerprint readers can certainly be broken), but they are a big step up from 4 or 6 numbers.

  23. Re:if you have buggy Appleware, you're a bot? on Company Claims 80% of Facebook Ad Clicks Are From Bots · · Score: 1

    Here's a great experiment for you in order to answer your own question.
    1. Turn off Javascript
    2. Go to facebook
    3. Click an ad.
    (Wee bit difficult without grabbing the JS source and manually getting the links, ain't it?)

  24. Re:Good Grief. on New Moxie Marlinspike Tool Cracks Crypto Passwords · · Score: 1

    Because surely if he didn't build them, nobody else ever would. The entire point is that he makes the vulnerabilities known, posts them publicly, and often (if not always) gives the manufacturer a chance to correct the issue FIRST.

  25. Re:under the DMCA any antivirus software can get s on Ubisoft Uplay DRM Found To Include a Rootkit · · Score: 1

    So then the next question is, did Ubisoft get my permission? EULAs are not *nearly* as binding as manufacturers like to make out.